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Gaza says Sunday was 'deadliest day' so far.

Usama Afaaq

Moderator
Palestinian officials in Gaza say Sunday was the deadliest day since the current fighting with Israel began.
Forty-two people were killed in Israeli airstrikes on the territory on Sunday.
Israel's army says Palestinian militants have fired more than 3,000 rockets at Israel over the past week.
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has warned that further fighting could plunge the region into an "uncontainable crisis".
He pleaded for an immediate end to the "utterly appalling" violence.
Early on Monday, Israeli warplanes launched 80 airstrikes on several areas of Gaza City, shortly after Hamas militants fired a barrage of rockets at southern Israel.


The UN has also warned of fuel shortages in Gaza which could lead to hospitals and other facilities losing power.
Lynn Hastings, UN deputy special coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, told the BBC that she had appealed to Israeli authorities to allow the UN to bring in fuel and supplies but was told it was not safe.
Gaza officials said 42 people, including 16 women and 10 children, died in Sunday's Israeli airstrikes.
Ten people, including two children, have been killed in rocket attacks on Israel since the fighting began last Monday, Israel said.
The overall death toll in Gaza now stands at 197 people, including 58 children and 34 women, with 1,230 injured, according to the Hamas-controlled health ministry. Israel says dozens of militants are among the dead.
What happened on Sunday?
Israeli airstrikes hit a busy street in Gaza just after midnight on Sunday, causing at least three buildings to collapse and dozens of deaths.

Hamas launched series of rockets towards southern Israel overnight and during the afternoon.
Millions of Israelis scrambled to safe rooms or shelters as sirens went off. Palestinians also tried to take precautions, but in the densely packed and poorly resourced Gaza Strip, many had nowhere to go.
A Palestinian holds a teddy bear from the rubble of a destroyed houses after an Israeli air strike in Gaza City

Rescuers in Gaza have spent much of the day searching through the debris of the strikes.
Riyad Eshkuntana told Reuters news agency he put his daughters to sleep in a room of his house that he thought was the furthest from the explosions. Only one of his daughters, Suzy, six, survived the night. His wife and three other children died.
"I ran to check up on the girls," said Mr Eshkuntana. "My wife jumped, she hugged the girls to take them out from the room, then a second airstrike hit the room... The ceilings were destroyed and I was under the rubble."
 

Hadeeqa Khan

Active Member
It is absolutely crime against humanity and criminals from both side must be held accountable for killing innocent people. Every one has the right to live peacefully. It is basic norms of human right.
 
United Nations is the servant of riches .Nothing can be expected from them as usual... Oh lord please help the distressed people and suffering of Mankind ...
 
UN more like usless nations . All they do is sit back and let this happen . All they do is close their eyes to these inhuman acts .
 
Terrorizing and killing innocent people, scarring children for life both physically and emotionally, forcefully removing people from their homes and lands, unlawful detainment of innocent citizens, and keeping them in an open air prison are all traits of war crimes and Israel should be held accountable to the harshest international penalties, sanctions and to be penalized on the international level for this conflict to come to an end.
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